The Advisors' Blog

This blog features wisdom from respected compensation consultants and lawyers

February 2, 2022

Stock Options: SEC’s Proposed “Insider Trading” Rules Could Affect Grants & Disclosures

There are so many facets of the SEC’s December proposal on Rule 10b5-1 & Insider Trading that it’s been easy to overlook the impact it could have on option grant policies & practices. This Willis Towers Watson blog from Steve Seelig, Bill Kalten and Lindsay Green zeroes in on that aspect, which came on the heels of last fall’s Staff Accounting Bulletin about spring-loaded grants.

The blog recommends that you take the SAB and these proposed rule amendments into account when considering the timing of 2022 option grants. Here’s an excerpt about what will be required if the proposal is adopted as-is:

The proposal expands the information all companies would need to disclose, not just those companies required to add a footnote to their ASC 718 expense disclosures referenced in the above example. The proposal would require all public companies, under new section 402(x), to include a description in their 10-K annual reports of their option/SAR grant policies and practices, how they determine the timing of grants (predetermined dates during the year or not), and the influence of material nonpublic information in their compensation committees’ grant timing and grant valuations.

This discussion would also be included in the company’s compensation discussion and analysis, so that shareholders can understand company option grant timing practices when considering say-on-pay votes, when approving executive compensation plans and when electing directors. We expect that these will become garden-variety discussions that all companies will be required to include, unless special circumstances exist.

For companies that make grants to named executive officers within 14 days before or after the release of material nonpublic information on quarterly reports or 8-Ks, the SEC would require additional disclosures so that shareholders understand with complete transparency how the process works. The SEC believes that many companies, after the end of a completed fiscal quarter or annual period, hold meetings with their boards of directors a week or two before issuing the earnings release when they are likely aware of material nonpublic information that could affect the stock price of the company. Rather than propose a facts and circumstances test, the SEC proposed a black letter rule that would mandate disclosure within this time frame.

This tabular disclosure would be required for companies that make awards within 14 calendar days before or after the filing of a periodic report on Form 10-Q or Form 10-K, an issuer share repurchase, or the filing or furnishing of a current report on Form 8-K that discloses material nonpublic information (including earnings information).

Instructions are provided as to how these columns must be populated, with rules substantially similar to those in the current proxy disclosure rules. All public companies must abide by the option disclosure rules, including smaller reporting companies.

The WTW team notes that if the proposal is adopted, companies could be required to provide this additional disclosure in 2023 proxies, about 2022 grants. For that reason, even though we don’t yet have the final rules, companies may want to take a second look at their 2022 grant cycle. It may be prudent to reconsider grants that are expected to fall within 14 days before or after earnings or other announcements that could affect share price – or at least consult with legal counsel on whether to be so proactive. Remember that the SEC is also looking for comments on aspects of the rule that may not work well in practice (and since the proposal still hasn’t been published in the Federal Register, which will start the clock on the comment period, you have extra time to get those in).

Here’s an excerpt from WTW’s blog, with parting thoughts:

If the regulations are finalized during 2022, it is likely that the SEC will allow companies and insiders some ramp-up time before they must comply with the new restrictions. It would certainly be worthwhile for companies to consult with their stock plan administrators to determine what actions need be taken to meet the new rules. The question of whether it makes sense to adopt the new requirements before they are finalized becomes a legal question that SEC counsel can help determine.

Liz Dunshee